The Ambivalent Force: Perspectives on the PoliceGinn, 1970 - 360 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 71
Página 239
... rules of plead- ing and evidence at each other - rules generally unintelligible to the non - lawyer - and apparently doing everything to avoid coming to grips with the simple question to be decided : Is the accused guilty or innocent of ...
... rules of plead- ing and evidence at each other - rules generally unintelligible to the non - lawyer - and apparently doing everything to avoid coming to grips with the simple question to be decided : Is the accused guilty or innocent of ...
Página 250
... rules for the po- lice can be suggested briefly . 1 ) The police should not be allowed to stop anyone unless something particular about him , as distinguished from the mass of people , gives cause to believe that he has committed a ...
... rules for the po- lice can be suggested briefly . 1 ) The police should not be allowed to stop anyone unless something particular about him , as distinguished from the mass of people , gives cause to believe that he has committed a ...
Página 299
... rules in the force was at cross- purposes with the effort to attain a certain sub- stantive end . Two Responses A ... rules and norms which express the policeman's position as a member of a group which feels keenly its pariah status.18 ...
... rules in the force was at cross- purposes with the effort to attain a certain sub- stantive end . Two Responses A ... rules and norms which express the policeman's position as a member of a group which feels keenly its pariah status.18 ...
Contenido
Bowsky | 32 |
Police Role and Career | 54 |
23 | 105 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 17 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Ambivalent Force: Perspectives on the Police Arthur Niederhoffer,Abraham S. Blumberg Vista de fragmentos - 1976 |
Términos y frases comunes
accused action activities Administration agencies American areas arrest authority become behavior Bruce Smith calls cent Chicago chief cial citizens committed confidence game control city counsel court crime criminal law cynicism decision defendant detectives Detroit develop discretion emergency apprehensions evidence fact feel Fourth Amendment function ghetto individual interrogation involved Justice juvenile law enforcement lawyer less lice major ment mentally ill Miranda Negro Newark noninvolved norms observed occupational offenses organization patrol patrolman PCR Unit percent police brutality Police Department police force police officers policeman political population practice probable cause problem procedures professional protection question race riots racial reason relations reported response role rules self-reported rioters situation social society Sociological stop and frisk street suspect tend tion tive trial violation violence York York City York Police Department